The Honeymoon is Over
Let there be no mistake: I love my new wife, Felchyana, but she’s starting to get on my nerves. Being a veteran of two marriages and three wars you’d think I might be familiar with this growing feeling of spite I’m experiencing, but it’s not the case. She must be one of these “modern women” I keep seeing represented on sitcoms and the like. I can’t say I approve, good people. I finally got the chance to take us away on a honeymoon. You may recall the expense of the wedding and bail for bachelor party attendees left me a little strapped for cash. Tied down screaming to a medieval wooden rack, actually. But fate intervened, and after correctly guessing the number of jellybeans in the jar at Red Bagel’s annual commune picnic I achieved a great windfall. It was apparently the loudest windfall ever since I won some sort of contest three states away, and the prize money was enough to take my blushing new bride off on an extravagant honeymoon. You would think that enough for any woman, right? Wrong! Not for Felchyana. We had a quarrel over where to go on our honeymoon, the first argument we’ve ever had. If you discount all her attempts to get out of the wedding. I wanted us to see beautiful Niagra Falls, even though I don’t approve of the racial epithet in their name. Felchyana wanted us to visit Leavenworth Penitentiary, judging by her frantic pointing to the picture in the paper. Well, you can see this is an almost insurmountable difference of opinion, but we decided to compromise. I locked her up inside the apartment and went to Alabama. It was quite a wonderful tour through primitive culture, good people. After hearing our beloved Editor describe it with such vivid detail I was anxious to see what it was like and see all the great tourist spots—the world’s smallest library, the place Red Bagel slept, so on. Imagine my surprise to return home and see it had been taken over by the Russian mob! Well, okay, it wasn’t that big a surprise. But it was quite a shock to see Felchyana apparently involved in some manner. There were four or five large men surrounding her, the shortest of which said his name was Yogi and persistently called me “dude.” He instructed me that he was Felchyana’s cousin and would be taking care of her while she was in the states. He said he was happy I had married into the family seeing as I was such a man of means—I would say the throw pillows worked in making the apartment look a lot more upscale. He also warned me that if I hurt her in any way he would break my legs into splinters, if he could find them. He found that addition particularly funny. So, like the hired hand who agreed to clean up the rhinoceros cage, I’m in much deeper than I ever imagined. Felchyana has been strutting around the apartment like she owns the place lately, ever since those mob fellows gave me their friendly warning. She even cries less than she did after we were just married. Chalk it up to falling into routine, maybe she’s even happier with things this way, but it feels like the spark is gone. Not that I’m giving up. You know me, good people, I’m in it for the long haul—thirty years or death, whatever comes first. And there’s a certain amount of truth in that old wives’ tale about people being different from each other. Felchyana is no Arvelyn, that’s for sure, but obviously I wasn’t happy with Arvelyn’s attempts to kill me and backstabbing bed-jumping. So maybe everything will work out for the best. It will require a little bit of change on my part, like not locking my wife in our home when I leave at any time, but if other people can learn to do it, so can I.
Kids, Meet Your New Mom |